Canadian students mock Jamaica
Published: Saturday | September 17, 201151 Comments
THE HUFFINGTON Post has reported that students at an elite Montreal business school painted themselves in blackface and chanted in mock Jamaican accents at a back-to-school event that had the university expressing regret Thursday.
According to the Post, the orientation-week stunt was organised by a student sports committee at the Hautes ÉTudes Commerciales, the Université de Montréal's business school.
Participants were encouraged to dress in Olympic-themed costumes, with one group choosing to portray Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, the newspaper said.
"Along with donning the colours of the Jamaican flag, several students also covered their face, arms and legs in black paint. The colourful attire included at least one Rastafarian hat, one green underwear patterned with monkey faces, and a stuffed animal that students carried around," the newspaper reported.
The article continued: "One witness, who is of Jamaican descent, said he felt uncomfortable and was shocked to hear some students chanting, 'Smoke more weed.' At one point the students also repeatedly chanted, 'Ya man!'"
Deeply offensive
"It was terrible and I felt awful seeing it," said Anthony Morgan, a 25-year-old law student at McGill University.
"Students at that level can't have the idea in their head that this is OK."
Morgan happened to be on the Université de Montréal's campus Wednesday afternoon as the event was taking place at the school's football stadium. He recorded the mock sprinters with his BlackBerry camera.
He said he found the display deeply offensive because of the troubling historical connotations of blackface.
"It is connected to a longer tradition of minstrel shows, reducing black people to pretty much jokes," he said. 'They're put on as a spectacle, to almost look grotesque."
A spokesman for the business school said the stunt was unacceptable, but he said there were no ill intentions. He said the students should simply have chosen another way to get into the Olympic-themed spirit.
"They interpreted the theme poorly," said Michael Lartigau.
"We spoke to the students and they found the reaction regrettable and are sorry," he reportedly told the Post.
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